Not unless the seller expressly stated something that turned out no to be true. For instance, if you asked the seller whether the transmission was good and he verbally guaranteed it, and you then found out it wasn't, you have recourse to ask for your money back. However, there's no 3-day return rule for vehicles, new or used. You struck a contract with the seller when you bought the car and it belongs to you.
If you bought the car from a dealer you have 30 days if you bought it from a private party you have 7 days in georgia.
You cannot return a vehicle. If you bought the used car "AS IS" with no warranty then you bought it as is, which means, exactly that, AS IS. If however you bought it with a warranty then the warranty may cover the repair.
There is no return policy unless the dealer agrees to this. You bought the car so it is yours. A car dealer is not like Walmart where you can return an item you bought.
NO. There is no cooling off period on the sale of automobiles. You bought it and you own it.NO. There is no cooling off period on the sale of automobiles. You bought it and you own it.
Three days.
it depends on the dealership.
After a car sale, a private party can return the car within thirty days. This return policy is dependent on the individual seller.
The spies took three days to return to Rahab in the Bible.
is it dealer bought car? if so then pending on your state theres something called a buyers remoss law. you have up 2 a certain amount of days to return the car.
Some states have the "Lemon Law" where the consumer can return a car no questions asked as long as it's within three (3) days. After those days have passed, you will need to consult professional legal advice as to what recourse, if any, you may have.
It took three days to reach the moon and another three days to return.
it shouldn't matter. 30 days from the time you bought it.